The Impact of a Life-Disrupting Threat on Team Identity

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Abstract

Team identity is periodically disrupted by identity threat, yet minimal research has addressed how life-disrupting threats impact team identity. In the current study, the authors employed a case study design to examine the effects of a life-disrupting threat (i.e., the start of the COVID-19 pandemic) on team identity. The authors, leveraging interviews and participant journaling, examined individuals who identify with at least one sport team, finding that team identity was mostly “inactive” as this life-disrupting threat set in. Further, although participants recognized the importance of their fandom in terms of social connectivity (i.e., relationships with fellow fans) and opportunity for escape, they emphasized that, overall, being a fan was unimportant during the early months of the pandemic. Collectively, these findings highlight the need to study team identity (and identity threat) from a more “macro” perspective–that is, considering fandom in conjunction with other salient factors in fans’ lives.

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Sveinson, K., Delia, E. B., Mansfield, A. C., & Calow, E. (2023). The Impact of a Life-Disrupting Threat on Team Identity. Sport Management Review, 26(4), 561–581. https://doi.org/10.1080/14413523.2022.2148858

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